Polyantipass wrote on May 24
th, 2002 at 8:52am:
I am a registered sex offender, and was originally charged with viewing child pornography on the Internet. No victims were involved, and my probation officer seems more concerned about me wanting to go out and physically harm a child than anything else. I still don't understand that; but I will live with it.
Probation Officers know that the viewing of exploited children is usually a precursor of or simply one of other, more malicious habits in which pedophiles engage. Victims were involved sir, the subjects in the photographs. The fact that you don't see that is troubling.
Quote:I am currently in therapy that is NOT helping; I sit in a group, talk about not offending, and waste an hour (not to mention a large chunk of change) of my time.
If the urge to reoffend is truly absent (which I respectfully doubt), then I fail to see why you have not moved through the course of therapy rather quickly. If the urge to reoffend is still present, or if you are reoffending, it's apparent to just about everyone reading this that you're still in denial that you have a problem. As clumsy as they are, most states' SOTP programs are worthwhile from a therapeutic standpoint-- ABSENT private treatment from a Board Certified Clinical Pyschologist or Psychiatrist. The hammer of probation violation/possible jail time usually is enough to give a patient pause to reflect over the kind of behavior they engaged in and why it is so very wrong, legally, morally, ethically. If you think things are bad now, I can assure you jail time for pedophiles is a living hell. Beatings, extortion, sexual abuse, and a possible death sentence via STD are not out of the question.
Quote:Result of the first polygraph was an earfull of admissions to the Polygrapher (per the probation officer's and therapist's "suggestions"), and a failed polygraph.
No polygraph interrogator, no Probation Officer, no therapist is going to believe you if your denials and subsequent limited admissions continue. If these were false admissions, then you need to correct that as soon as possible.
Quote:The second polygraph taken was answered totally and completely honestly, with further admissions, and came back inconclusive. On those grounds, I was transferred back to my offending state where I received a violation hearing and an extra year of probation.
What was the exact violation of probation?
Quote:My problem is, I have a polygraph coming up in about a week or so, and I am extremely nervous about failing it. I am pretty sure that if I fail, I will be sent to jail, and will possibly face a resentencing for Prison.
I can see why.
Quote:I don't know what to do here. I feel that I will probably react negatively to some of the relevant questions, and I want to do everything I can to do avoid reacting to relevant questions. I think this is impossible.
Anyone, anyone can pass a polygraph-- even people as troubled as you.
You need a lawyer. You need (and I base this on your post) therapy.